logo
Mother of six gives free breakfast to neighbourhood kids

Mother of six gives free breakfast to neighbourhood kids

Straits Times07-06-2025
Ms Lydia Susiyanti Sukarbi (right) and Ms Halinah Yatim with the items they have prepared for breakfast. ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY
Mum of six who juggles three jobs starts free breakfast club for children in Ang Mo Kio
SINGAPORE – With six children and three part-time jobs to juggle, Ms Lydia Susiyanti Sukarbi, the 36-year-old sole breadwinner of her household, may not have much.
But what she has – compassion, generosity and grit – she gives freely.
Three times a week before the crack of dawn, she dishes out free breakfast to underprivileged children who live in her Ang Mo Kio neighbourhood.
Ms Lydia, a former school canteen stall vendor, started her Breakfast Buddy initiative in February as she had seen first-hand how some students went without recess so that their younger siblings had money to buy food to eat.
'How can we, as neighbours, step up for these kids? I feel I should help to fill this gap,' said Ms Lydia, who lives with her family in a two-room Housing Board rental flat.
'Breakfast Buddy is more than giving them breakfast. It's to let the children know there are resources for them, and I'm here to share my resources. If it's within my capability, I will give.
'I'm like an auntie, mother, teacher to them. And they share many things with me.'
Ms Lydia juggles two jobs and also runs a home-based bridal business, while her husband stays home to look after their six children, aged between one and 15.
She earns about $3,000 a month on average.
Her modest means did not stop her from pursuing her 'dream' of providing breakfast to children, although she was initially uncertain how long she could keep the initiative going.
She said: 'I have just enough with three jobs and government subsidies. Though I'm concerned about money myself, I went ahead as I thought: Just do it.'
Her children are on the Education Ministry's Financial Assistance Scheme, which helps lower-income families with basic schooling expenses.
In the first month, she forked out $300 to $400 out of her own pocket to buy breakfast items for the children. She also asked her friends and extended family members if they wanted to pitch in.
Through word of mouth, more donors came to donate in cash or kind, such as cereals. Most of the breakfast cost is now covered by donations, she said.
More than just breakfast
Breakfast starts at 6.30am at the void deck of Block 228A Ang Mo Kio Street 23, where the children gather at tables to eat.
Ms Lydia and her partner for the initiative, Ms Halinah Yatim, prepare a variety of cereals, bread with various types of spread such as peanut butter and Nutella, and biscuits. Drinks include hot Milo, milk and juice.
About 15 children show up each time, she said.
They include Aina Adrianna Mohammad Fareez, 11, and her seven-year-old brother, who come three times a week. Their mother, a single mum, works in childcare.
Aina, the second eldest of five children, said of the free breakfast: 'It fills my stomach. We don't eat much at home, as my mum needs to rush to work (in the morning).
'And it has some of my favourite things such as Froot Loops (a type of cereal), Nutella and Milo.'
Breakfast starts at 6.30am at the void deck of Block 228A Ang Mo Kio Street 23, where the children gather at tables to eat.
ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY
Ms Halinah, a 52-year-old divorcee, helps Ms Lydia as often as she can with the breakfast initiative, despite her own mobility problems – she has knee and nerve issues.
'It makes me happy when I see them eating together and going to school together. They also share with us what they are facing,' said Ms Halinah. Using a mobility scooter, it takes her 20 minutes from her two-room rental flat in Ang Mo Kio to reach the breakfast venue.
'We ask them what they want (to eat) to make them feel they have the privilege of choosing. That they can choose also brightens their day.'
She speaks from experience, recalling not being able to afford the food her children – aged 10 to 22 – wanted to eat when they were younger.
Three of her four children are now working, easing her financial burden.
Ms Lydia Susiyanti started her Breakfast Buddy initiative in February as she saw first-hand how some students went without recess so that their younger siblings had money to buy food to eat.
ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY
When Breakfast Buddy first started, Ms Lydia and Ms Halinah served up dishes such as scrambled eggs and hot dog rolls, but were surprised to find that the children did not like such fare.
One child told Ms Lydia he always ate sausages at home and wanted something different.
So they asked the children what they really wanted. The answer: cereal, especially Froot Loops, and bread with Nutella.
One issue Ms Lydia faced was the lack of space, given the small size of her two-room flat, to store the food items.
So the Singapore Government Partnerships Office (SGPO), which was set up to strengthen the Government's partnerships and engagements with Singaporeans, linked her up recently with the People's Association (PA) to secure a storage space at the Teck Ghee Palm View Residents' Network.
The SGPO learnt about her efforts through Skillseed, a social enterprise Ms Lydia works at.
Skillseed is currently helping Ms Lydia to apply for a community grant to fund the breakfast items, with the SGPO and PA facilitating the process.
'Everyone in the community can be a change maker. We are completely inspired by Lydia's spirit of wanting to help others,' said an SGPO spokeswoman.
'Lydia's Breakfast Buddy initiative is a heartwarming citizen-led, ground-up effort that brings the neighbourhood together, anchored in the spirit of gotong-royong (communal help),' she said.
Ms Lydia Susiyanti (in pink) and Ms Halinah Yatim setting up the breakfast spread for primary school students on May 28.
ST PHOTO: SHINTARO TAY
At Skillseed, Ms Lydia is a mentor guide, where she leads learning journeys in her neighbourhood and shares about her life, as well as the experiences and strengths of the rental flat community.
Ms Phua Huijia, founding director of Skillseed, said Ms Lydia is paid per trail as a community guide, and earns an hourly rate for mentoring new guides.
Ms Lydia also works on an ad hoc basis at social service agency Allkin Singapore, where she organises activities and programmes that bring people together.
Her giving nature started early, around the age of 10 or 11, when she would invite children she met while playing home for a meal.
The eldest of five, Ms Lydia recalled: 'If they looked haggard or looked like they were not well taken care of, I would ask them if they want to eat. And my mum never said no when I asked if we could feed another mouth.'
She describes her mother, a retired hawker, as her inspiration for compassion and generosity.
Ms Lydia said of her growing-up years: 'People say, 'oh you don't have enough, then you are poor'. But we don't feel poor. We had just enough, probably less than normal, but that doesn't make us less of a person.
'I feel that the word poor shouldn't be used to identify or label people. All of us are under-resourced, with time, money and love.'
Theresa Tan is senior social affairs correspondent at The Straits Times. She covers issues that affect families, youth and vulnerable groups.
Join ST's WhatsApp Channel and get the latest news and must-reads.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

BTO Telegram groups connect thousands in new kampung spirit
BTO Telegram groups connect thousands in new kampung spirit

New Paper

time7 hours ago

  • New Paper

BTO Telegram groups connect thousands in new kampung spirit

Mr Thomson Lim designed the interiors of his two-room flexi Build-To-Order (BTO) flat in Tengah's Garden Vale project, and would periodically share pictures of the carpentry in the estate's chat group on Telegram. When the renovations were done in June 2024, other residents were curious about how his flat looked, so he hosted an open house for around 20 neighbours. The 50-year-old had met his fellow Tengah residents through Telegram and was keen to share his experience with them, so they could make decisions about their own renovations. "I enjoy bonding with the residents from our chats... I believe sharing is always a good thing to do in life," said Mr Lim, who works at a fast-food chain. He has since become close friends with the neighbours he met on Telegram, going for meals and exercising with them. They even volunteer together at the Tengah Community Club, helping out at events such as family day, award ceremonies and workshops. Mr Lim and his Tengah buddies are among an estimated tens of thousands of Singaporeans who are members of resident-run Telegram groups for BTO estates here. There are no official numbers of BTO Telegram groups, but they can be easily found by searching on Telegram or BTOHQ, a community-run website sharing information on local properties. The size of each of these groups can range from a few hundred to thousands. Such groups started to gain popularity over the last few years when demand for BTO flats surged in 2020. Around the same time, Telegram also gained traction here as a messaging platform. While residents of BTO projects also form chat groups on WhatsApp, another popular messaging platform, such groups have proliferated on Telegram, likely because it allows up to 20,000 members, compared with WhatsApp's 2,000 members. Telegram's large group size limit allows a chat group to be created for an entire BTO estate, rather than just for one block or specific resident interest groups. Members can also chat in different channels created within the group. WhatsApp also allows members to chat under different topics. While Mr Lim's Telegram group has 1,300 members, he does not know all of them personally. He got to know the residents who reached out to him individually on Telegram and sometimes even meets up with them. These groups serve as hubs for information and commonly start as a way for residents to get information on their BTO projects and seek advice on everything from BTO queue numbers to various Housing Board policies and schemes, to estate amenities. After residents move in, many groups evolve to become avenues through which residents socialise, trade items and share updates on estate developments. Such groups are usually created by one or more residents before the BTO's balloting stage, and are open to members of the public. Residents can also volunteer to run smaller BTO project groups from the larger estate group. At Punggol's Northshore Residences, one resident said he set up the BTO estate's Telegram group as an information hub for his neighbours about a year before they collected their keys in 2020. The 39-year-old project manager, who wanted to be known only as Jerry, said residents would join the group to be "in the know" as there would be discussions about project milestones. Some residents, such as Mr Yong Ming Rong, 35, have found such groups useful for getting advice on home furnishings. The private tutor, who lives at Northshore Residences, had initially sent a message to neighbours in his BTO Telegram group to give away some coffee powder. He later told another resident in the group that he was considering getting solar film to cover his windows, and the resident invited him to her home so he could see what solar film on windows looks like. "It helps to build a bit of a kampung spirit knowing there are people who can answer each other's questions," Mr Yong said. Tengah, a relatively new HDB town with 18 BTO projects, has a number of Telegram groups, including one with around 10,000 members. The group that Mr Lim runs allows members to chat across 17 different channels on topics such as childcare, gardening, group buys and home-based food businesses. Through Telegram, another Tengah resident, Mr Chris Loh, met others in the estate who, like him, love gardening. The 44-year-old senior operations executive said some residents would occasionally reach out to him through the app for help to propagate and pot their plants. "When you like something or there is a common topic, you want to share. For example, sometimes when you work from home, people ask if you want to eat lunch together," he added. Freelance photographer Chan Kai Lun created an estate health and fitness Telegram group where Tengah residents organise activities such as group runs. "Without this space to voice out and share, most people would remain isolated, only (saying) 'hi-bye' with the next-door neighbour. But I have made many good friends in Tengah through Telegram. It makes a real difference," said the 42-year-old. Unlike WhatsApp, Telegram allows its users to maintain privacy as phone numbers are not needed to create accounts. Dr Vincent Chua, an associate professor in sociology and anthropology at NUS, said Telegram groups are a way for people to balance maintaining privacy with being sociable. Mr Thomson Lim (right) and his Tengah buddies are among an estimated tens of thousands of Singaporeans who are members of resident-run Telegram groups for BTO estates here. ST PHOTO: LUTHER LAU Pointing to how these neighbourhood online groups tend to focus on exchanging information over relationship-building, he said it is one way the kampung spirit among residents has evolved - it has become "quieter but still present" through the way residents show support for one another online. Dr Chua added that building strong ties is still possible when online interactions are paired with or lead to offline interactions. "They nourish each other. Support online translates offline. Over time, they blend and human relationships become friendships." Tengah resident Cyrus Xu, a 32-year-old additive manufacturing engineer, linked up with his future neighbours on Telegram in 2022, even before choosing his unit. He collected his keys in March 2025 and still keeps in touch with them. "We get to know what our neighbours are up to if they are keen to share, and can ask for help at our fingertips," said Mr Xu. "I have got to know many neighbours from all the blocks."

Children living with or near parents to get priority in HDB sales exercises, regardless of marital status, from July , Singapore News
Children living with or near parents to get priority in HDB sales exercises, regardless of marital status, from July , Singapore News

AsiaOne

timea day ago

  • AsiaOne

Children living with or near parents to get priority in HDB sales exercises, regardless of marital status, from July , Singapore News

Singles applying for new flats can join married couples in getting priority access when they buy a home near or with their parents, beginning with the Housing Board's July 2025 sales exercise. That is when the new Family Care Scheme will kick in, said the HDB in a statement on Sunday (July 20). The launch date for the July BTO sales exercise has not been announced. News that singles can get priority during the BTO application process was first announced by Prime Minister Lawrence Wong at the National Day Rally last year. He had said that the Government will extend priority access to new flats to all parents and their children, regardless of marital status. Priority access was previously reserved only for married couples and their parents. HDB said in its statement last November that the new FCS — which has two components — streamlines three priority schemes for married couples, parents and seniors, and will also include singles. The two components are FCS (Proximity) — which will be rolled out with the July BTO sales exercise — and FCS (Joint Balloting), which will be implemented end-2025. For FCS (Proximity), both parents and children will have priority access if they are applying for a new flat to live with or near each other, regardless of marital status. This replaces the current replaces the Married Child Priority Scheme and Senior Priority Scheme. The FCS (Joint Balloting) is where parents and their children, regardless of marital status, will be able to jointly apply for two units in the same BTO project, where there are 2-room Flexi or 3-room flats in the BTO project. This will replace the current Multi-Generation Priority Scheme, which prioritises married couples and parents who live near each other in the same BTO project. More flats for second-tier families In their statement on Sunday, HDB also provided more details on the additional allocation of BTO flats for second-timer families, as earlier announced in March. Second-timer families will have an increased allocation quota of 3-room and larger BTO flats by five percentage points, said HDB. This is to support their upgrading aspirations or "right-sizing plans", they said. The proportion of BTO flats set aside for second-timer families will now be: • Up to 20 per cent (from up to 15 per cent currently) of 3-room Standard flats; • Up to 10 per cent (from up to 5 per cent currently) of 3-room Plus and Prime flats, and 4-room and larger Standard, Plus and Prime flats HDB added that at least 80 to 90 per cent of 3-room and larger flats will continue to be set aside for first-timer families. Increase in Fresh Start Housing Grant Other enhancements that will take effect from the July 2025 sales exercises include the Deferred Income Assessment (DIA) scheme and the Fresh Start Housing Grant for eligible second-timer families The DIA scheme allows eligible couples to apply for a new flat first and defer their income assessment for the Enhanced CPF Housing Grant (EHG) and an HDB housing loan until nearer to key collection. The enhanced scheme will mean that only one of the two parties will have to be studying or serving National Service where previously both parties have to meet this requirement. In addition, the Fresh Start Housing Grant will be increased from $50,000 to $75,000 to support more second-timer public rental households with children to own a flat. Eligible ST families can use the increased grant to buy a new 2-room Flexi or 3-room Standard BTO, or SBF flat, on a shorter lease, said HDB. HDB will offer over 10,000 new flats in the July sales exercise. Over half of these, or 5,500 flats, will be Build-To-Order (BTO) units, elaborated Minister for National Development Chee Hong Tat in a Facebook post on July 16. [[nid:719872]] candicecai@

Over 10,000 new HDB flats for sale in July exercise, Singapore News
Over 10,000 new HDB flats for sale in July exercise, Singapore News

AsiaOne

time5 days ago

  • AsiaOne

Over 10,000 new HDB flats for sale in July exercise, Singapore News

The Housing Board will offer over 10,000 new flats in the upcoming sales exercise this month. Over half of these will be Build-To-Order (BTO) units. Among them are about 1,400 BTO flats in Clementi and Bukit Panjang which will come with a shorter waiting time of under three years, Minister for National Development Chee Hong Tat announced in a Facebook post on Wednesday (July 16). Some 753 flats, consisting of two-room Flexi, three-, and four-room units, will be on offer at the Clementi Emerald project, with a waiting time of 34 months. The project — located at the intersection of Clementi Avenue 6 and Commonwealth Avenue West — will be near amenities such as schools, minimart, Clementi MRT station and Clementi Mall, which has a supermarket, shops and a food court. The Straits Times reported last December that construction for these units had begun on Sept 20, with a targeted completion date in the first quarter of 2029. There will also be 643 units for sale at the Bangkit Breeze project comprising two-room Flexi, three-, four- and five-room flats, said Chee on Facebook. They will have a waiting time of 35 months. Located along Bukit Panjang Ring Road, the BTO project is near Bangkit LRT station as well as amenities such as Beacon Primary School and Zhenghua Park. Other projects among the 5,500 BTO flats offered in the July sales exercise will be in Bukit Merah, Sembawang, Tampines, Toa Payoh and Woodlands. This total is more than the last BTO launch in February, which saw 5,032 flats for sale. The upcoming launch will also include the first flats in Simei in more than a decade. The project — which HDB classifies as part of Tampines — will offer 380 units of two-room Flexi, four- and five-room flats on a plot bounded by Simei Road and Upper Changi Road East. It is a five-minute walk to Upper Changi MRT station with the Singapore University of Technology and Design in the vicinity. The first BTO project in the new Sembawang North housing estate, and the second development in the new Woodlands North Coast precinct will also be on offer. HDB previously announced that 19,600 BTO flats will be launched in 2025, including 3,800 units with waiting time of under three years. More SBF units in July's exercise than 'initially committed' In his Facebook post, Chee said that HDB will put up over 4,600 balance flats in July — the second Sale of Balance Flats (SBF) exercise in 2025. "This is more than the 3,000 SBF units that we had initially committed to," he said, adding that more than one-third — or some 1,733 flats — are completed units, while the remaining units will be "completed progressively". The second SBF exercise will take the combined supply of such flats in 2025 to more than 10,000, according to Chee. The last exercise in February was oversubscribed, with more than 23,000 applicants for the 5,590 SBF units offered. [[nid:718240]] chingshijie@

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store